The Fate of Class Action Common Fund Orders

V. Waye, M. Duffy
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Abstract

Common Fund Orders’ (CFOs) have had a significant effect on Australian third party-funded class actions by requiring all class members to make a contribution to the third-party litigation funder’s fee in the event of a successful outcome.  This altered past practice whereby only class members who had contracted with the litigation funder would be liable for such a contribution.  However in a 5:2 decision in BMW Australia Ltd v Brewster in 2019, the High Court cast some doubt on CFOs, determining that neither s 33ZF Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth) nor s 183 Civil Procedure Act 2005 (NSW) provided a legal basis for making CFOs at the outset of proceedings so as to secure litigation funding support.  In late 2020, the Commonwealth Parliamentary Joint Committee (PJC) on Corporations and Financial Services recommended that legislation be enacted to ‘address uncertainty’ in Brewster in a manner that would enable CFOs to be made at settlement or judgment.  The authors canvass normative arguments as to the merits of CFOs and compare the alternative practice of making Funding Equalisation Orders (FEOs). They also consider the related issue of courts setting overall funding commissions.  Given the possibility of legislative intervention, they also review arguments as to the potential constitutional validity of CFOs, a matter that was raised, but received very limited treatment from the High Court in BMW.
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集体诉讼共同基金命令的命运
共同基金令(cfo)对澳大利亚第三方资助的集体诉讼产生了重大影响,它要求所有集体成员在成功的情况下向第三方诉讼出资人支付费用。这改变了过去的做法,即只有与诉讼资助者签订合同的集体成员才有责任支付这种捐款。然而,在2019年宝马澳大利亚有限公司诉布鲁斯特案中,高等法院以5:2的裁决对首席财务官提出了一些质疑,认定1976年澳大利亚联邦法院法案(Cth)第33ZF条和2005年民事诉讼法(NSW)第183条都没有为在诉讼开始时制定首席财务官以获得诉讼资金支持提供法律依据。2020年底,英联邦议会公司和金融服务联合委员会(PJC)建议制定立法,以“解决布鲁斯特的不确定性”,使首席财务官能够在结算或判断时做出决定。作者仔细研究了关于首席财务官的优点的规范性论点,并比较了制定资金平衡令(feo)的替代做法。它们还审议了法院设定全面供资委员会的有关问题。鉴于立法干预的可能性,他们还审查了关于财务主任可能具有宪法效力的论点,这一问题已被提出,但在宝马高等法院得到的处理非常有限。
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